Nothing in recent memory of staffers at The Enquirer struck a chord with readers the way photojournalist Glenn Hartong's rainbow photo did. The color photo appeared in March, and readers immediately began calling to ask for copies. Since its publication, readers have ordered about 1,700 prints.

So he waited. From the time he discussed shooting techniques with a rainbow photographer in Yellowstone National Park in 1993, he waited, his enthusiasm mounting.

He was waiting for nothing in particular on March 13 at the Philadelphia Street Burger King in Covington. It was about 2 in the afternoon. He had just driven his Ford Explorer away from the pick-up window with a double cheeseburger and milk.

I wish I had had a large-format film camera with me, but I'm real pleased with how the digital did.

I was sitting in the car, facing east, and I saw some really dark clouds and it was starting to sprinkle a little bit, he said. I thought, "Those dark clouds are pretty neat,' then I saw a little sun hitting the skyline.

Uh-oh, he thought. This could be it.

He knew exactly where he should be. Immediately.

I put my stuff (food) aside and drove up to Devou Park as fast as I legally could, he said.

When he arrived at the park overlook about three minutes later, there was still no rainbow, but there was a brightly lit skyline against a really dark sky. I thought, OK, I'll shoot that. ...

As I put the camera up to my eye, that's when the rainbow appeared, he said. I first saw it in the view-finder.

To the east/northeast, the rainbow spanned the Ohio River, linking Kentucky and Ohio, with downtown Cincinnati and Covington underneath.

Fifty-seven seconds and several downhill steps after his first frame, Mr. Hartong had what he wanted. Thirty-nine seconds after that, the rainbow began to disappear.

The whole thing  from the first whiff of flame-broiled beef to the successful shot  took place in less than five minutes, he said.

His personal celebration was less lengthy.

A guy drove by, looking at me like, "Who's this guy hopping up and down?' and sped up and drove away.

Mr. Hartong, 41, who has concentrated on dramatic fire-scene photographs in the past, has a 20-by-24-inch print of the rainbow, ready to frame for an over-the-mantel spot in his log home in Springfield Township.